School of Medicine

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Bio
I am a physician-scientist and currently a Breast Pathology Fellow (AP-3, Anatomic Pathology only program) at the Department of Pathology of the Stanford University School of Medicine/Stanford Healthcare with a particular clinical interest in Breast Pathology and Molecular Genetic Pathology and a research interest in the development of new quantitative approaches to pathology to accurately predict the development of cancer, correctly classify tumors by prognosis and predict response to cancer therapy, leveraging biomedical informatics and computational pathology tools to inquire large datasets of clinical and genomics data, mostly focusing on breast cancer.

Bio
I completed an undergraduate degree in Biological Chemistry at the University of Toronto, followed by a medical degree at the Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis. I am currently enrolled in the Anatomic and Clinical Pathology Residency Program at the Department of Pathology, and am slated to complete Fellowships in Molecular Genetic Pathology and Surgical Pathology there as well. My interests include oncologic pathology, cardiothoracic pathology, molecular pathology, and applications of artificial intelligence and digital imaging in pathology.

Bio
Dr. Erna Forgó is an Anatomic and Clinical Pathology Resident at Stanford University School of Medicine with special interests in Gastrointestinal & Hepatobiliary Pathology and Gynecologic Pathology.

Bio
Alex Gitlin, M.D., Ph.D. is currently a 3rd year resident in clinical pathology at Stanford University. Prior to Stanford, Alex received his M.D. from Weill Cornell Medicine (2017) and his Ph.D. from Rockefeller University (2016) as part of the Medical Scientist Training Program (MSTP) at the Tri-Institutional M.D.-Ph.D. program. During his graduate training, Dr. Gitlin focused on the cellular and molecular mechanisms underlying germinal center reactions and the formation of long-lived humoral immunity. His work elucidated the mechanisms by which CD4+ T cells induce selective clonal expansion of germinal center B cells during the immune response. Currently, Alex's clinical and research interests lie in understanding how inflammatory signaling pathways regulate different forms of programmed cell death and inflammation.

Bio
Chris Hsiung, M.D., Ph.D., is a resident physician in Clinical Pathology at Stanford University School of Medicine. Chris completed his M.D. (2017) and Ph.D.(2016) in Cell and Molecular Biology through the Medical Scientist Training Program at the Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, where he was co-advised by Dr. Gerd Blobel and Dr. Arjun Raj. Chris's PhD work uncovered several molecular aspects of genome accessibility and transcriptional control during mitosis, lending insights into how transcriptional states are propagated despite microscopic chromosome condensation and transcriptional silencing during mitosis. Currently, Chris is interested in developing and applying functional genomics approaches for deciphering gene regulatory networks that underlie cell fate plasticity in disease.